Green Acres Farm (Kern County, CA)

From SourceWatch
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Toxic sludge 80px.png

WARNING! Sewage sludge is toxic. Food should not be grown in "biosolids." Join the Food Rights Network.

Green Acres Farm is a 4,688 acre Kern County, CA farm owned by Los Angeles and managed by Responsible Biosolids Management.[1] Los Angeles County began disposing of its sewage sludge by applying it to farmland at Green Acres in 1994 and purchased the farm in 2000. The farm grows wheat, corn, and alfalfa, which is mostly fed to dairy cattle.

History of Los Angeles Sludge Disposal

Until 1987, Los Angeles dumped its sewage sludge in the ocean. Once that practice was banned, L.A. began disposing of its sludge on landfills and farms. "The city bought Green Acres Farm in 2000 for $9.6 million and then spent $35 million to upgrade its sewage treatment system" to produce Class A Biosolids. Following the Green Acres purchase, Los Angeles began sending 750 tons per day in 28 trucks to Green Acres, a 120 mile trip. [2] On June 6, 2006, 85% of Kern County voters voted to ban sludge application in Kern County. However, as of 2011, the ban still had not taken effect due to court challenges. For more information, see the article on Kern County's Ban on Sewage Sludge Land Application.

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References

  1. Steve Chawkins, "Sludge Ban Is Primed to Pass; Strong support for the Kern County measure could force L.A. and others in the state to find new areas to dump tons of treated human waste," Los Angeles Times, May 2, 2006.
  2. Kerry Cavanaugh, "Green Acres Ain't The Place to Be: L.A. Sludge Farm Facing Ire of Kern County Voters," The Daily News of Los Angeles, February 19, 2006.

External resources